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Lit Hub Weekly: June 22 – 26, 2026

Maggie McKinley considers Joan Didion’s “future-oriented” nostalgia. | Lit Hub Criticism “I would never blame them. But being around Americans while this country is bombing mine is the last thing I can do.” Iranian writer Shohreh Laici on war and

This article was originally published by Literary Hub and is republished here under license.

e.r. braithwaite TODAY: In 1912, E. R. Braithwaite is born. 

Also on Lit Hub:

On the time George Sand got dapper • The Chicago Manual of Style should rethink its stance on capitalization • How Barry Windsor-Smith reinvented Marvel’s Wolverine • Creating tension when your characters can’t do much • An American in the Soviet Union on the morning communism fell • It’s cool when animals move fast • Recovering from a creative slump • This week in literary history, Washington Irving’s “Rip Van Winkle” is publishedThe labor history and complicated racial solidarity of mid-century Minneapolis • Queer life in the Arabic world • F. Scott Fitzgerald’s most overlooked story collection • Terria Smithrecommends anti-colonial travel stories • The case forslowing down and noticing natureConspiracy theorist Carl Oglesby’sidea of Yankees versus Cowboys • The elder Millennial women’s experience of American life • Time travel stories don’t need to be cautionary tales • On archiving as family dutyThe first (and only) book ban case heard by the Supreme Court • 40 great books you might have missed • TV writer and novelist Rasheed Newson talks to Spiro Skentos • This week’s Independent Press Top 40 Bestsellers for fiction andnonfiction5 book reviews you need to read this week • Men’s fashion trends in early American history • Namwali Serpell and Cathy Park Hong discuss Toni Morrison’s Jazz • Ye Hui on the relief of finishing a poem • The long, strange linguistic history of the letter WSerena Chopra’s TBR • Why a novel isn’t a machine • BIPOC-centered historical fiction • June’s best reviewed bookse.

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